HRCP calls for addressing women’s under-representation in judiciary

As part of HRCP’s media campaign, ahead of International Women’s Day (March 8), the commission on Friday drew attention towards women’s under-representation in Pakistan’s legal profession, particularly in the superior judiciary.

It noted that only 5.8% of high court judges in the country were women, and to date, no woman had been appointed as a judge of the Supreme Court or as chief justice of any of the high courts.

Women also remained under-represented in positions of status and influence in others fields of the legal profession, including offices of bar associations and the office of the attorney general, the commission contended. Since 1947, there had been only one female president of the Supreme Court Bar Association.

Representation of women in courts, according to HRCP.

These numbers were the lowest in the region, if not the world over, HRCP said.

It stated that women continued to experience significant discrimination related to their participation in public and political life in most domains of the public sphere.

The reasons for the under-representation of women in power and decision-making were multifaceted and complex, and stemmed from economic, social and cultural issues, as well as from negative stereotypes about women and entrenched gender roles, explained the commission.

HRCP urged the government to fulfill Pakistan’s obligations to address the barriers to women’s full and active participation in the public sphere and advance women’s equality and effective representation in the legal profession, particularly judiciary.